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As Congress moves forward with immigration reform, we take a look at how this issue connects to culture, business and families in the Northwest.Our region is home to a unique blend of immigrants who work in all parts of our economy — from high-tech to agriculture. This population already has a deeply-rooted history here. And its ranks are expanding rapidly.Proposals for comprehensive immigration reform address border security, employment verification, guest-worker programs and pathway to citizenship for an estimated 11 million unauthorized immigrants in the US.

More than 500 pregnant women in ICE detention, after reversal of Obama policy

Jacinta Morales learned she was pregnant after she was processed into ICE detention. She said she was happy to be pregnant.
KUOW Photo/Liz Jones
Jacinta Morales learned she was pregnant after she was processed into ICE detention. She said she was happy to be pregnant.

Immigration authorities have detained 506 pregnant women since December, when the Trump administration ended a policy to release most pregnant women while their immigration cases are pending.

The move, announced last week, has led to an outcry from immigrant rights groups who say these women aren’t getting adequate care.

“It’s just completely shameless that they’re going after pregnant women in a way that’s just completely unwarranted,” said Matt Adams, legal director of the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project in Seattle.

Every year, Adam’s group represents hundreds of clients detained at the Northwest Detention Center in Tacoma, which houses one of the largest populations of detainees in the country. 

“These individuals are not required to be locked up,” Adams said. “There is no reason the mothers should not be allowed to go back to their families, to their homes and being in an environment that is going to give them the best chance at having healthy children.”

One woman Adams represents is Jacinta Morales, an undocumented mother of two U.S. citizens. She’s originally from Michoacán, Mexico.

We first met Morales at the Northwest Detention Center last year. She wore a yellow uniform; her long hair pulled back in braids.

Morales recounted complications with her pregnancy in detention, starting the day she learned Immigration and Customs Enforcement planned to put her on a flight back to Mexico.

“The day ICE told me I’d be leaving in a week’s time, I started to cry,” Morales said, speaking through an interpreter. “I had pains and felt nausea.”

She was worried about being separated from her son in Portland, Oregon. He was 11 at the time and living with her longtime partner, Gonzalo. Her older son was living in Mexico.

Medical records from the detention center document her anxiety, and that her condition was getting worse.

Then one day, Morales woke up bleeding.

“I was really bleeding hard,” she said. “The officer asked me if I was feeling a lot of pain and I said yes. And she said, ‘I’m going to go see if they can see you quickly.’”

Roughly three hours after her initial complaint, Morales was taken to the hospital — in the back of a patrol car, sitting up. She said it made the bleeding worse.

He pregnancy ended in a miscarriage.

An ICE spokeswoman said Morales received appropriate care. But Morales believes more could have been done.

Morales is one of 10 pregnant women who have made a formal complaint to the Department of Homeland Security. Some say they received poor prenatal care, others miscarried, and blamed the stress of being detained.

Dozens of Congress members have called for a thorough investigation.

Under the Obama administration, ICE updated its guidelines for pregnant women facing deportation. Generally, they avoided locking up women unless there was a serious criminal history or extraordinary circumstances.

The Trump Administration just scrapped that policy, saying the shift is in line with the president’s crackdown on illegal immigration.

“From our perspective, we are just aligning this policy, as we are with all other policies, with the president's direction,” said Philip Miller, deputy executive associate director of ICE’s enforcement and removal operations. “We are not going to carve out classes of persons who are not subject to the Immigration and Nationality Act.”

Rather than a blanket policy that favors releasing these women, Miller said ICE officers will evaluate each case individually.

“Taking into account all factors to include the women’s pregnancy and ICE’s ability to care for her in detention,” he said.

Plus other factors, like if she’s a flight risk or a threat to public safety.

Miller says detention centers are equipped to care for pregnant immigrants. However, women in their third trimester will generally be released.

Overall, this policy shift appears to have greatly boosted the number of pregnant women in detention. According to ICE data provided to KUOW, 292 pregnant women were held in detention during a four-month period from January to May 2017. Compare that to last week, when Miller said 506 pregnant women have been detained since the policy change took effect three months ago.   

From inside detention, Jacinta Morales said she was telling her story in the hope that other women won’t face what she went through.

“It’s a place I would not wish any woman to be in at all," Morales said. "There’s a lot of stress and depression. It makes you feel desperate.”

Morales has since been released. An immigration judge set her bond amount at the lowest level possible, indicating she’s not a flight risk or dangerous.

She’s now with her son in Oregon. A year after we first met, her immigration case is still pending.

Year started with KUOW: 2006